Glamorgan Gazette

School worker’s fatal overdose

Death unrelated to thrown chair incident:

- ANNA LEWIS anna.lewis@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A SCHOOL support officer with a history of prescripti­on drug addiction was found dead in bed after an apparent overdose, an inquest has heard.

Lee Sims, 31, was discovered unresponsi­ve when girlfriend Rebecca Chappell tried to wake him at his Bridgend home on December 1 last year.

At an inquest held at Pontypridd Coroner’s Court, it was heard Mr Sims had returned home early from his job at special school Ysgol Bryn Castell, Bridgend, two days before his death after an incident which saw him struck on the head by a pupil.

However, it was found that incident did not contribute to the father’s death after a toxicology report found his blood levels to contain a “significan­t” amount of methadone.

During written evidence summarised by the coroner, Ms Chappell said Mr Sims told her he was having a “bad time” and had come home early on November 29 after having a “chair thrown at him” by a pupil.

He woke the following morning complainin­g of a bad headache, and had vomited after taking a Nurofen, Ms Chappell said.

Later in the day Mr Sims complained of a bad stomach and said he could not remember driving to his partner’s address.

The pair spent the night at Mr Sims’ home with Mr Sims’ sister. Paramedics were called when Mr Sims was found unresponsi­ve the following morning.

In her evidence, Mr Sims’ mother Amanda Sims said she had phoned her son on November 29 after learning he had left work early.

Mr Sims told his mother a pupil, referred to as Pupil L, had “thrown a chair at my head” and that he was suffering from a headache.

During the hearing, Mr Sims was described by staff as a dedicated colleague who had “adored his children”.

Medical history read from Mr Sims’ doctor said the school worker had received treatment in 2016 for opiate-type drug dependency after injuring his back while playing rugby.

Mr Sims was last seen by doctors in September last year where he was described in a “low mood”, having previously suffered from anxiety and depression.

In her evidence, Mr Sims’ former wife Laura Sims said the school worker had taken Tramadol from 2014 due to a bad back and had been taking the painkiller “daily” by the following year.

In a statement, she said: “I think Lee always thought he was invincible as he had taken Tramadol for a number of years. Neither he nor I thought it would come to this.”

During his findings, South Wales assistant coroner David Reagan accepted Mr Sims’ medical cause of death as methadone toxicity.

Mr Reagan also said there was no medical evidence to suggest Mr Sims died as a result of the chair-throwing incident.

He said: “That incident was not causative to the death in this case.”

Describing Mr Sims as a “caring son, father, and partner”, Mr Reagan returned a conclusion of death due to a drug-related condition.

 ??  ?? Lee Sims
Lee Sims

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